Barack Obama  
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Barack Obama and His Major Achievements

Date: Sunday, May 22, 2011

Time: 10:00-11:20 Communication Session by Mr. Douglas Perkins from US

Barack Obama became president of the United States in 2009. What do you think are his major achievements, either Japan-specific or not? I'll talk about some of the big issues within the US (the Afghanistan War, health care, Guantanamo Bay), but would like to discuss international perceptions of the US, too. Please try to think of one good thing and one bad thing you think the US has done in the past 2 years.

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I gave the talk at the Akita Communicative English Studies group meeting. See http://www.edinet.ne.jp/~takeshis/images/AES06/AEStop.html for more information.

President Obama took power in January, 2009. On Sunday, we talked about his major accomplishments in the two years since then.

To begin with, there are two main political parties in the United States: Democrats and Republicans. Major issues can be divided into two categories: social issues and economic issues. To give some examples, on social issues, Democrats are likely to be pro choice. Republicans are likely to be pro gun and pro Christian. On economic issues, Democrats are typically fans of government safety net programs, like Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, and other smaller such programs. Republicans are typically fans of military spending, opponents of other spending, and want to lower taxes. Those are some stereotypical party views, and as such should be taken with a grain of salt. But even this simple analysis shows that we have 4 classes of voters -- a person could side with mainstream Democrats or Republicans on both social issues and economic issues or on just one of each. This leads to a problem that the US currently faces, where voters decide who to vote for based on social issues, and the voters' economic views are mostly ignored.

Certainly Obama's greatest triumph was catching Bin Laden, though many of us found the execution rather unsettling. Also, Obama passed legislation that will allow homosexuals to serve in the military. This reverses a 220 year ban, and is Obama's only liberal triumph to date.

On the economic front, he passed landmark health care legislation. This bill deals with some problems in the American health care system — children can stay on their parents' insurance until the age of 25, many preventative procedures are now free, and it is harder for insurance companies to reject applicants with pre-existing conditions. Still, the big question is whether this legislation helps limit costs. If health care prices keep going up, it will have been a failure (and a gift to insurance companies who will get millions of new customers). If costs are limited, on the other hand, it will have been a success. Much of the bill takes effect in 2014 and later, so right now we can't tell.

There are some issues where the voters' views are mostly ignored by politicians. As mentioned, politicians often focus on social issues to gain votes, and this gives them some freedom to ignore popular opinion on economic issues. For example, the majority of Americans would like the US to leave Iraq and Afghanistan in the relatively near future, but it is unclear when this will happen. Also, the majority of Americans support Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid in their current form, yet there is a lot of political discussion on how to change these programs. On taxes, the majority of Americans favor raising taxes on the rich, yet Obama allowed taxes to be lowered. And finally, the majority of Americans want some sort of justice brought to bear on banks and bankers responsible for the economic downturn three years ago, yet both Bush and Obama have ignored this issue entirely.

The next election is in 2012, and right now it seems Obama has a slight edge over possible Republican candidates. However, we will have to carefully watch what happens with taxes, cuts to government programs, and the wars currently being fought. Those matters will play a major role in driving public opinion in Nov. 2012.

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Giving away your work  
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Giving Away Your Work On the Internet

Date: Sunday, January 24, 2010

Time: 10:00-11:20 Communication Session by Mr. Douglas Perkins from US

We can use the internet to find lots of information, and we can use it to share our own work. We can also find other people's work, reuse it, and then share our new creations. This is particularly useful for amateurs who don't have the resources to do everything on their own. Personally, I make many education materials and want to give them away. Although few people use my materials, anyone can copy them and do whatever they like, such as improving them and in turn giving away the improved materials. Let's talk about what we can do to make the things we create high quality, easy for others to reuse, and legal.

I gave the talk at the Akita Communicative English Studies group meeting. See http://www.edinet.ne.jp/~takeshis/images/AES06/AESadd11.htm for more information.

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This blog entry is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License. For attribution of this work, link to this page and include my name, Douglas P Perkins.

My grandfather  

One of my pictures is in the 2009 JET Journal, page 189.

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The following is an essay I submitted to 2009 JET Journal. It was rejected.

My Grandfather's Last Journey

My grandfather died last June, and I didn't go to the funeral. It was too far away, too expensive. The truth is, I didn't want to go, though. Getting together after someone dies is a way to bring closure and to grieve, and no doubt that's important. But it's much more important to get together before the person dies. That's what we had done. In May, a month before my grandfather died, he came to Japan. His friends told him not to go, asked him to think of his failing health. But I think it was precisely because of his failing health that he insisted on going. The man loved to travel and be with his family, and to have that taken away is a burden I don't want to imagine. Neither did he, as it turns out.

So, in May my grandfather came to Japan with my parents. The four of us went to Tokyo and Kyoto and Himeji. We worried, my parents and I did, that my grandfather might wander off somewhere and get lost. So when we got to the hotel, we gave him three hotel business cards -- one for his wallet, one for his jacket pocket, and one for his pants pocket. We worried because there are three things my grandfather wanted every day: coffee, the New York Times (or failing that, the International Herald Tribune), and to check his email. Every morning, he got up and tried to find these three things. Of course my grandfather spoke no Japanese, so watching him find a newspaper was a sight to see. In the train stations he walked from vendor to vendor asking whether they had a newspaper in English. Most of the vendors had no idea what he meant, but nobody was ever rude, and in any case he didn't give up until he found something to read.

I clearly remember the day he died. I went to Yashima Junior High School, and when I checked my email after first period, there was the sad news. "Oh shit ... shit ..." I said, not loudly, but surely audible to the other teachers in the staff room. Nobody said anything. Not knowing what to do, I decided to take a walk through the hallways. This is a good strategy: when you're at a loss for words, go take a walk and look around. It will no doubt not solve your problem, but nobody would expect it to, anyway.

Yashima is an old building. It turned 61 this year, and the tea lady remembers when she studied there, the year it was built. When she was a student, the building was heated by a stove in each classroom. Steam pipes were added later, and they weave through the hallways at head level. As is standard for buildings of that era, the exterior is drab concrete. Off-white paint is peeling, and the wooden gym floor is buckling. I walked through the hallways that morning trying to figure out how I felt. The school has character, and places with character have the quality that they color the memories you form there. This April, Yashima is moving to a new building, and I think the old one will be torn down. I can't help but imagine that the memories I have, what my grandfather meant to me, will somehow be taken away too. This doesn't make sense, but even so.

In the hallway of Yashima there hangs a sign. The sign, which displays the school motto, reads, 「自分で決め 自分で歩く 自分の道。」. "Make your own choices. Walk your own pace. Choose your own path." I have always liked that motto, and it seems my grandfather did too. He loved to travel, and visiting Japan was his way of chasing his dreams, even in the end. Especially in the end. And that makes me smile.

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This blog entry is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License. For attribution of this work, link to this page and include my name, Douglas P Perkins.

Romaji styles  
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There are many ways of writing Japanese in romaji. In Japan, all elementary school 4th graders study Kunrei style romaji, which is approved by MEXT. However, when writing names of places and people, we usually use Hepburn style romaji. Here are some examples of Hepburn style romaji.

ローマ字はスタイルいくつかがあります。日本では小学校4年生は訓令式ローマ字を勉強します。文部科学省は訓令式ローマ字を選びました。しかし、場所の名前や人の名前を書くときに、普通はヘバン式ローマ字を使われます。これはヘバン式ローマ字の例です。

  • チ = chi.
    • ちなつ = Chinatsu.
    • 川内 = Kawauchi.
  • シ = shi.
    • 柴田 = Shibata.
    • たかし = Takashi.
  • オウ = o.
    • こうた = Kota.
    • 鳥海 = Chokai.
    • 本荘 = Honjo.
    • 佐藤 = Sato.
  • オオ = o.
    • 太田 = Ota.
    • 大竹 = Otake.
  • ジ = ji.
    • 笹子 = Jinego.
    • けんじ = Kenji.
    • 藤原 = Fujiwara.
  • フ = fu.
    • 富士さん = Mt. Fuji.
    • 三船 = Mifune.

Actually, when writing names, we use something like the Hepburn style. But where Hepburn style romaji has characters like ' (Ken'etsu) and ō (Satō), we often simplify those and just use a-z, A-Z. For example, Kenetsu and Sato.

実は、名前書くときに、ヘバン式ローマ字はほとんど使います。ヘバン式ローマ字には、「'」(「Ken'etsu」)や「ō」(「Satō」)がありますけど、普通は、そのことをスキップをして、「a-z, A-Z」だけを使います。たとえば、「Kenetsu」や「Sato」。

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This blog entry is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License. For attribution of this work, link to this page and include my name, Douglas P Perkins.

Japanese grammar  
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Junior high school English teachers in Japan use this grammar vocabulary on a regular basis. It may be useful to know in order to explain mistakes to students. See also Jim Breen's WWWJDIC, goo dictionary, and Tae Kim's Japanese guide to Japanese grammar.

EnglishKanjiKana
Sentenceぶん
Grammar文法ぶんぽう
Composition作文さくぶん
Noun名詞めいし
Pronoun代名詞だいめいし
Proper noun固有名詞こゆうめいし
Relative pronoun関係代名詞かんけいだいめいし
Adjective形容詞けいようし
Adverb副詞ふくし
Particle助詞じょし
Verb動詞どうし
Helping verb助動詞じょどうし
Participle分詞ぶんし
Preposition前置詞ぜんちし
Conjunction接続詞せつぞくし
Gerund動名詞どうめいし
Object目的語もくてきご
Question word疑問詞ぎもんし
Reference term指示語しじご
Comparative比較級ひかくきゅう
Superlative最上級さいじょうきゅう
Same rank同格どうかく
Past tense過去形かこけい
Present tense現在形げんざいけい
Future tense未来形みらいけい
Normal form原形げんけい
Perfect form完了形かんりょうけい
Continuous form進行形しんこうけい
Singular form単数形たんすうけい
Plural form複数形ふくすうけい
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This blog entry is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License. For attribution of this work, link to this page and include my name, Douglas P Perkins.

ESL flash cards  

I compiled many flash cards and art for teaching elementary school English in Japan. Many files are Creative Commons licensed (if written in the file itself), so you can modify them and redistribute them, if you like.

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The flash cards cover many topics: days of the week, months, weather, fruit, emotions, family members, greetings, pizza, school rooms, buildings, vehicles, and more. For each topic, there are A4 flash cards and karuta cards. You probably want the PDFs. If you want to edit the files, download the original images or the odg files. You can edit Open Document Graphics (odg) and Open Document Text (odt) files with OpenOffice, among other programs. OpenOffice is free. See also Clker, PD Clipart, and Wikimedia Commons.

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I find it disgusting that I can't include mp3s of The Beatles' "Hello Goodbye" or Eric Clapton's "Willie and the Hand Jive" on my website. These 40-year-old songs that I can use in my classroom, that I think you should use in yours, they are part of our history. They are part of our culture, but they're locked away from us, and for no good reason.

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This blog entry is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License. For attribution of this work, link to this page and include my name, Douglas P Perkins.

ALT course of study  

Two of my pictures are in the 2008 JET Journal, pages 95-96.

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The following is an essay I submitted to the 2008 JET Essay Contest (Japanese Language). It was rejected.

ALTの練習課程
ダグラス パーキンス

私は去年8月、小さいながらも居心地よい家を出て日本に来ました。自己紹介で、「日本語は上手じゃないですけど、英語は上手です。だから、みんなは英語の勉強をして、私は日本語の勉強をします」と私は言いました。自己紹介を5回しましたが、5回とも同じ事を言いました。何度も同じ事を言い続ければ、だんだんそうなると信じ込むようになります。私は毎日日本語の勉強をします。多くの方法を使います:本や教科書やカード、漢字プリントや会話やエッセイです。実は私はこのエッセイを書きましたが、一人で書いた訳ではありません。数ヶ月前、中学生と話して、「日本語でエッセイを書く。でも日本語は難しい。だからYou should help me with it.」と言いました。もしかしたら彼らにはそのアイデアが面白く聞こえたのかもしれません。彼らは「should」と「must」と同じ意味としてとらえたために「yes」と答えたかもしれません。つまり、私は「一緒にしましょう」と誘ったわけですが、彼らは「しなければならない」という責任や義務として理解したわけです。もしかしたら生徒は分からなくても、「yes」と答えたのかもしれません。私には分かりません。「私と生徒たちの努力が成功するだろうか?」と今思っています。今あなたが読めているということは成功したことになります。まあ、読めなくても私たちはとても楽しめたと思います。

中学校で、日本語の学ぶことは興味深い事だと思います。もし時間に余裕があるなら、あなたも毎日使う機会のある日本語の勉強をされたらいかがですか。学校の先生方も喜んであなたの勉強を手伝ってくれるはずです。先日、教頭先生が私にポエムをプレゼントしてくれました。漢字の練習のため、私はそのポエムを手本にコピー、手書きしました。でもポエムの漢字はまったく分かりませんでした。今に至ってもそのポエムの意味は私にとって不可解です。辞典で漢字を調べるのは長い時間がかかり大変です。そこでお話を作りました。モンスターと魔術を使って戦う魔法使いの話です。その呪文は日本語でしたので、魔法使いは一生懸命日本語を勉強しなくてはなりませんでした。つまり私が言いたいのは、「Slime Forest」と「Number Crunchers」とファンタジーロールプレイ、双方の利用ということです。おそらくあなたは紙で書く練習が好きでないかもしれません。でも幸運な事に、学校には漢字練習に使えるニンテンドーDSの漢字ビデオゲームがあるはずです。僕はまだそのゲームを試してみたことはありませんが、試してみた人がいたら、メールを下さい。何か分からない日本語に出会うとき、あなたは廊下を歩き回り、生徒を見つけ、質問をします。でもその生徒はあなたから逃げてしまいます。しかし10秒後には、その生徒のクラスメイトたちがその分からない日本語を説明してくれます。生徒たちは最初、日本語で説明します。でも10秒後には、なんとか英語で説明してくれます。その時彼らの英語は正しい英語ではないかもしれません。しかしそれは大事な事じゃないと思います。生徒のアドバイスは後でチェックすることが無論大切ですが、「学生に助けを求めて質問することは有益な戦略です。」「たしかに、眺めてみればなにかが見つかるのが普通です。しかしそれが求めていた何かでは、かならずしもないかもしれません。」とトールキンは書きました。つまり日本語の宿題やCLAIR日本語テストの準備をするとき、その事実を私たちは忘れてはいけません。なにしろ生徒たちはまだ敬語などの文法を十分には習得していない訳ですから。

日本語は色々な場所で勉強できます。自分の家で、中学校で、図書館で、Mr. Donutで、小学校で。小学校では、一年生は優しいですが、大変です。ALTと一緒に折り紙したり、絵を描いたり、遊んだりすることは大好きですが、自分の言っていることがALTに通じないことを気付きません。子供たちは大学で勉強したテキストの日本語では話しませんので、ちょっと大変です。その結果、私は二つの日本語を勉強しています。ひとつはですます体や敬語の日本語で、もうひとつは動詞がなくてもいい、1・2語文の日本語です。一年生と話す時ですます体を使えば、子供たちは私が言ったことを原形でリピートします。つまり、子供たちは動詞の変形をしてくれます。うれしい動詞活用サービスです。

ALTは学生と日本語で話してはいけないと言われています。時々そうではありませんが、ほとんどの場合において真実です。もちろん、ALTは少しどころか、全く日本語を教室で使いません。また、ALTが日本語を使えば、何人かの学生は日本語だけで話したがるでしょう。それはよくないことです。ですから、私は度々いくつかのトピックに生徒たちを引きつけるために、ほんの少し日本語を交えながら話します。間もなく、自分が話していることが分からなくなり、英語で話さなければならくなります。それでも、私の戦略はいつも上手くいくとは限りません。佐藤君というある優しい学生は、教室以外では決して私に英語で話さないことを人生の目標に決めました。しかし、ある日私たちは互いに中国語で挨拶をしましたから私は楽観的です。一方、もう一人の同姓の佐藤君は恥ずかしがり屋です。でも、「趣味は何ですか」と私は佐藤君に聞いて、彼は少しリラックスしました。先月、「佐藤君の趣味はバスケット」と言うのを見てから、今では「NBAでは誰がナンバーワンフォワードか」を一緒に論じています。クリーブランド・キャバリアーズのレブロン・ジェームズです。お互いの共通の興味を知らなければ、私にとって最初に紹介した佐藤君は、二番目に紹介した佐藤君と同じくらい離れた存在です。つまり、もしあなたが全くコミュニケーションをとらなければ、何を言語で話すかはあまり問題ではありません。ですから、昼食時間、バスケット練習、ブラスバンドクラブでチェロを弾いている時、何人かの生徒たちと私は日本語と英語の両方を使って話します。英語と日本語の程よい組み合わせで話すことによって、その彼も英語と日本語でもっと会話ができるために準備をするようになります。ここでの目的はコミュニケーションです。コミュニケーションはとても大切だと考えます。とりわけ、コミュニケーションは海外旅行、学校生活、親善、国際交流、エッセイの執筆、龍と会話、15小節をどの楽器が演奏するか尋ねたり、空手で新しい方を習うなど好奇心の真髄です。コミュニケーションはおそらく、いいえ、きっと楽しいですから。

ALT Course of Study
Douglas Perkins

Last August, I left my comfortable little home and came to Japan. In my self-introduction, I said "I don't speak Japanese very well, but for the classroom maybe my English is quite good. So, you will study English, and I will study Japanese." I gave my self-introduction only five times, but perhaps if you say something enough times you start to believe it. I study Japanese every day and in many ways: books, flashcards, writing drills, conversations, and essays. This essay was written by me, but certainly not me alone. Several months ago I told some junior high school students they should help me work on it. Maybe they thought it sounded interesting. Or maybe there was a translation error with the word "should" -- sometimes "should" is a command, but other times it's an invitation. Or maybe they simply said "yes" without understanding. I don't know. Sometimes I wonder whether our collective effort was a success. If you're reading this, then perhaps it was. Even if you aren't, we enjoyed it.

Studying Japanese at junior high schools is an interesting thing. If you have some extra time, why not spend it learning a language that you use every day? Other teachers will happily help you with your studies. For example, one time the vice principal gave me a poem. I copied the poem for kanji practice, but I didn't know the kanji. To this day I have no idea what the poem meant. Of course, looking up kanji takes a long time, so I made up a translation. It was about a wizard fighting monsters with magic, but the spell's words were in Japanese, so the wizard had to work very hard. I guess I'm saying it was a cross between Slime Forest, Number Crunchers, and fantasy role playing. Perhaps you don't like practicing on paper. Fortunately, there's a kanji video game for the Nintendo DS that one can use to practice kanji at school too. I haven't tried this yet. If you do, please email me. And when you don't understand something, wander the halls until you find a student. The student will run away. Then, ten seconds later the student's class will be explaining the Japanese you don't understand. They'll explain ... in Japanese. And ten seconds after that they'll figure out how to say it all in English. It may not be proper English, but I think that's not a problem. Asking students for help is a useful strategy, though it's important to double check their advice. As Tolkien said, "You always find something, if you look, but it is not always quite the something you were after." This fact should be borne in mind when doing Japanese homework and CLAIR Japanese tests. After all, kids may have not learned such grammar (honorifics) yet.

Japanese can be studied in many places: at home, exciting classes at the library, Mr. Donut, junior high school, and elementary school. At elementary school, first grade students are friendly and frustrating. They love to do origami or draw pictures or play, but they cannot tell when you don't understand what they're saying. This is challenging because they simultaneously use Japanese and basic English, but not the Japanese taught to foreigners at the university. Consequently, I know two Japaneses. On the one hand, keigo and masu and desu verb endings, and on the other hand, one- and two-word sentences, verbs optional. If you use desu and masu with first graders, they will repeat what you said except in direct form. It's like a happy and free conjugation service.

It may be remarked that one should not speak in Japanese with the students. Most of the time, this is true, but sometimes it isn't. Of course, in the classroom there is little or no role for Japanese. Also, there is a risk that if the ALT uses Japanese, some students will speak to the ALT only in Japanese. This is no good. So, I often use just enough Japanese to get them hooked on some topic. After a while, I will not understand something, so we will have to start using English. Even so, my strategy does not always work. One friendly student, Sato-kun, has decided it is his goal in life to never, ever, speak to me in English outside the classroom... Although, the other day we greeted each other in Chinese, so there is yet hope. On the other hand, another student, Sato-kun, is very shy. Yet, when I asked him, "Shumi wa nan desu ka?", he relaxed a little. After finding out that his hobby is watching basketball, we now regularly argue about who the best forward in the NBA is. It's LeBron James. Without finding that common interest between us, Sato #1-kun would be as distant from me as Sato #2-kun. In short, if you aren't communicating at all, it simply doesn't matter in what language you would speak if you were to do so. So, during lunch or at basketball practice or when playing cello with the brass band, some of the students and I speak to each other in both English and Japanese. By talking in a reasonable mix of Japanese and English, we become prepared to talk more, later, in Japanese and English. The aim here is communication, which I think is very important. After all, communication is at the heart of our interests, be it for travel abroad or school or friendship, cultural exchange, writing essays, speaking with dragons, asking what instruments play in measure fifteen, or learning a new form in karate. Or maybe, mostly, because it's a lot of fun.

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The long walk north  

The following is a speech I delivered to the Akita Interpreting Service at Joinus, Akita City, Japan.

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Description

Bill Bryson wrote a book entitled "A Walk in the Woods". The name says it all. The Appalachian Trail is a footpath, a hiking trail that starts at Springer Mountain, in Amicalola State Park near Dahlonega, Georgia and ends -- after five million footsteps -- at the summit of Mt. Katahdin in Baxter State Park, Maine. My brother and dad hiked the Appalachian Trail (or A.T. for short) twice, so when I graduated from college and had no summer job, the natural thing to do was to follow in their shoes and go hiking. The day after I graduated I drove a thousand miles from Colorado to North Dakota, two days later flew to Atlanta, and started walking. I later got a job offer -- Grand Canyon National Park had me on their backup list -- but by that time I'd hiked two hundred miles and had no intention of stopping.

Location

The A.T. goes through fourteen states: Georgia, North Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, West Virginia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine. The shortest state is West Virginia, containing less than fifty miles of trail, whereas the longest state is Virginia, consuming five hundred fifty miles. Hikers often lament that they're experiencing the Virginia Blues when crossing this state. As a point of consolation, it is believed that if you can get from Georgia through Virginia with enough time left in the year, the rest of the trail cannot stop you.

The easiest stretch of trail is two miles of road walking along the river near Harpers Ferry, Virginia. For me it was very difficult, though, because I had eaten a large deep-dish supreme pizza in Harpers Ferry and could barely walk. The hardest stretch is Mahoosuc Notch, in Maine. It's a large boulder field with scrambling, climbing, crawling, and jumping from boulder to boulder. Thru hikers typically hike three to four miles an hour (4.8 to 6.4 km/h), but the one-mile Notch takes even speedy hikers at least forty five minutes -- which is to say, it is three times slower than normal. I passed two eighty two year-old men in Mahoosuc Notch, and it was so inspiring to see them there. You could tell that they were going to finish the whole thing, and what an accomplishment. The easiest states are Virginia and West Virginia -- the trail is gently rolling hills with no big climbs or rocks. The hardest states are Maine and New Hampshire, where the elevation changes are extreme and many climbs and descents are scrambles over rocks and boulders. Maine and New Hampshire also have the most lookouts and views.

Length and Pace

The trail is two thousand one hundred seventy four miles long, or about three thousand five hundred kilometers. Its length varies by a few miles each year as sections of the trail are diverted or closed. In New York the A.T. goes through the Bear Mountain Zoo, but the zoo closes at night, so if you hike that stretch in the evening your trail is a quarter mile longer than everyone else's. The Kennebeck River has a canoe ferry, but if you were to ford the river (I tried but the water was too deep) it'd add a few hundred yards.

I hiked two thousand one hundred seventy four miles in ninety six days, which is an average of twenty two point seven miles a day. My longest week was three thirty mile days, a zero day, and three more thirty-mile days. My longest day was in Pennsylvania. I hiked about 22 miles in the morning, so I got to my scheduled stop, but it was such a wonderful day I decided to continue to the next shelter. I started towards it and began crossing the Palmerton Superfund Site. The Superfund is the American funding agency for cleaning up the country's worst environmental disasters. Palmerton once had a zinc mine, but its fumes killed everything in the hills, and the mine eventually closed (without doing anything to repair the damage it caused). The Superfund has provided some money to try to rejuvenate the land, but nothing has worked. After climbing an exposed ridge, the trail crosses a large plateau, and there are no birds or grass or flowers, just trunks of dead trees. The silence is eerie. But after a few miles, you come to some plants -- blueberries. And there are tons of blueberries; the animals and birds won't eat them. Then you're faced with the dilemma ... do you really want the blueberries that can survive heavy metal poisoning better than any other plant or animal? But they do look so tasty. There's also a spring that's unfit for drinking called Metallic Spring. Later that day, after several thunderstorms, I got to a road crossing where a man I'd met a month earlier -- The Mechanical Man, he called himself -- lived. My friend Sea Legs and I walked down the road to his house and knocked on the door. He and his wife --The Crayola Lady -- let us in, and they also took us to town for large calzones and beer. That day was thirty eight point six miles (62 km).

Lodging

One question I regularly hear when discussing thru hiking is, "Where do you sleep?" When you're hiking, you can sleep in shelters or tents. Tents work well, of course, but they're heavy and not so great if they get wet. Tents are also nice because you can stop wherever you want, so it's easy to spend the night alone. Shelters are three-walled lean-tos with a floor and roof and space for maybe six or twelve people. They're located near the trail every five to fifteen miles, so it's usually feasible to find one for the night. On the other hand, sometimes the shelters fill up. Most thru hikers start in April from Georgia, and at that time most of the shelters are busy places, though at other times not so much. A few shelters have doors and windows, none have electricity, and three are close enough to pizza places that you can order pizza to them. I recommend a large supreme pizza and a 2-liter of Coke.

Towns and Resupplying

Thru hikers sometimes sleep in town -- I did twenty nights. Much like there are small towns all over Honshu, the eastern United States has a large number of small towns. There's always a bar, sometimes a gas station, and if you're lucky, a hostel or hotel. The best hiking hostel is Rusty's Hard Time Hollow. Rusty is an old Mennonite who lives alone with no electricity, phone, or running water. He does have water, though -- he pipes a spring to his house. Some of the spring water runs through a concrete pit in the ground that acts as a refrigerator. There's also a cold water shower and a wood-powered sauna. You can stay in Rusty's barn if you like, and if you talk to him for a few hours in the evening he'll make you blueberry pancakes in the morning. In Vermont, there's a hotel and bar with the best Irish Whiskey selection in the state; thru hikers like this place. The most unique hostel is in New Jersey. A bar decided they'd get a few more patrons if they put some bunk beds in a storage shed, so hikers can go there, drink until closing time, and sleep in the less-than picturesque storage shed for the night.

The second question I regularly hear when discussing thru hiking is, "How do you get food?" On average, there's a town every three days, and the longest stretch without one is five or six days. A person eats maybe two pounds of food each day, so that's at most twelve pounds of food in your pack. When you get to town, you resupply at whatever store is there. Typical foods are instant pastas, couscous, King-Size Snickers bars, candy bars, Pop Tarts, peanuts, bagels, cheese, Little Debbie-brand desserts, Hostess-brand fruit pies, and anything freeze-dried. Hikers tend to eat five or six meals a day, with names taken from The Lord of the Rings: breakfast, second breakfast, elevenses, first lunch, second lunch, and dinner. One hiker I knew called himself Bilbo. He had hairy feet, was short, and wore a ring on a chain around his neck. For the most part the foods are high-sugar, except for a carbohydrate-rich dinner. Sometimes people hike with or while drinking beer ... this is called a brew hike.

The halfway point of the Appalachian Trail is in Pine Grove Furnace State Park, Pennsylvania. It is tradition among thru hikers to eat a half gallon (1.89 liters) of ice cream at the halfway point. I finished mine in 43 minutes. But that wasn't enough -- thru hikers are always hungry -- so I then had two bacon cheeseburgers, a 2-liter of Coke, and 12 oatmeal cream pies. That's around five thousand calories in one meal. People crave food when they're hiking, but after a while you don't crave anything in particular -- you crave any food.

History

The first person to thru hike the Appalachian Trail was Earl Shaffer in 1948. The trail was first conceived in the 1920s, but it wasn't completed until 1937 -- this was mostly by building connections between preexisting shorter trails. Some years later, the north end was moved farther north, and the south end farther south. The trail starts and ends at the top of mountains, and it goes over as many high peaks as it can, which is good for views.

National Parks and Trails

The A.T. is a National Scenic Trail, which means it has some limited protections under the law. There is hiking along the trail, but there aren't mountain bikes or ATVs (that is, 4-wheelers), and there are only horses in a few places. The trail goes through two national parks -- Great Smokey Mountains National Park and Shenandoah National Park -- and many state parks. It's mostly located on public land, but in a few places it goes through private property. There's some federal money for upkeep on national trails, but most of the maintenance money and labor is through private donations and volunteer efforts. Some people who live near the trail leave jugs of water and coolers of sodas at trail heads -- such people are called Trail Angels. Their efforts are particularly important in states like New York where, for no apparent reason, there aren't many good water supplies. Over time, some of the Appalachian Trail has been seized for other uses. The Blue Ridge Parkway and Shenandoah's Skyline Drive, for instance, were part of the Appalachian Trail until they were converted into a summer road for an old Presidential retreat. The trail was rebuilt nearby.

Thru Hikers

In 2007, one thousand one hundred twenty five people started the trail. A hundred of them quit by 32 miles (51 km) into the trail. Half of them made it to the halfway point, and two hundred seventy people finished the entire thing (See the Appalachian Trail Club's website for more on this.). Bryson's book came out in 1999, and this inspired a great many people to try the hike. Numbers of attempted thru hikes peaked and has been declining since 2000. Yet while the numbers of attempts are significantly down, the quality of hikers must be increasing, because completions are only marginally down.

When my dad was hiking in 1999, he encountered many pilots and flight attendants. That year, apparently one of the major U.S. airlines offered extended furloughs to employees to save some money, and many of its employees decided the outdoor life appealed to them. Maybe pilots and flight attendants tend not to be tied town as much as other people. Perhaps what with the current and continuing American recession, more people will go back to nature. Hiking takes money and time -- not that much money, but even so -- and this limits the kinds of people who decide to do a thru hike. For the most part, thru hikers are either in their low twenties or recent retirees in their late fifties or early sixties. The majority of hikers are men, and it's rare to encounter older women. Sometimes you find men between jobs, and many middle-aged women hike with big dogs. In the past eighty years, only three people have been murdered on the A.T. -- all women, and all in Georgia. Unfortunately, the latest of these was just last month. They caught the man who did it. The murderers were locals, not other hikers. Even so, it's sad that while the trail is generally incredibly safe, it wasn't safe enough last month.

Section Hikers

There are plenty of people who would like to hike the A.T. but don't have the time. Apparently getting married and having kids makes it hard to take a four month vacation. Anyway, many of these people take their summer vacations every year and go hiking for a week or two. They finish the A.T. in sections, so they're called section hikers. It shows a great deal of dedication to finish a two thousand mile trail over ten or twenty years, and section hikers have that dedication.

Weekend Warriors

The most entertaining guests on the trail -- other than the black bears, porcupines and skunks -- are weekend warriors. Weekend warriors can't get much time off from their high-paying jobs in the big city, but come Friday afternoon they're out to the wilderness. Weekend warriors don't have much experience with long-distance hiking, though, so they tend to be insulting or very useful. It's common for them to carry too much food and give it away -- the Boy Scouts do the same. On the other hand, I once had a conversation with a weekend warrior couple who told me I smelled. I laughed, because of course I smelled. All thru hikers smell. Then they suggested I take a bath, and I assured them that I would ... when I got to the next town. I'm not sure that appeased their noses, but I never saw them again, so who knows. A man in New Hampshire once ordered me to "Stop running up the mountain." It's true I was running up the mountain -- Mount Washington, in fact, a rather big climb -- but as I explained in vain to him, after hiking for fifteen hundred miles, it would be embarrassing if I weren't faster than him.

Blazing

The Appalachian Trail is marked by white blazes. That is, a two inch by one inch painted rectangle on a tree or rock can be seen every fifty or five hundred yards. To get to Maine you just follow the white blazes. There are also blue blazes, marking side trails to water and shelter, and Dartmouth College blazes the trail with its school colors, orange and black.

Like most pursuits, there is a purist element to hiking. People who hike every foot of the trail call themselves white blazers, since they pass (and sometimes count) every white blaze. Some hikers skip sections of the trail -- Bill Bryson skipped a thousand miles -- and they are called blue blazers. Some people look down on blue blazers and consider them not to be real hikers. Hikers who hitchhike are called yellow blazers. Hikers who skip sections of the trail by taking a boat or raft are called aqua blazers, and as a point of humor, those who get injured on the trail are called red blazers.

Hiking Solo or in Groups

I hiked alone, and Bill Bryson did too, but he missed something important about hiking alone. When you're walking with nobody around, you can think about whatever you want. Some people spend time remembering song lyrics from their childhood. Sometimes people ponder what gear is best, or what they'll do after they finish the trail. It doesn't really matter what you think about, of course. Some people walk alone and get bored, so they carry MP3 players and listen to music. If you walk alone, you determine your own pace and tend to move faster, and there's typically company at shelters in the evenings anyhow. Other people walk in groups. My dad hiked with my brother; husbands and wives hike together; and it's not uncommon to encounter one girl hiking with two or three guys. Many people start the trail with friends, but many others make friends while walking. It's an interesting thing that most hikers are laid back, friendly people. In their regular lives maybe they're actually real jerks -- we don't know -- but when people are out on the trail for months on end with no responsibility except to slowly walk north, they tend to be generally enjoyable company. Reading Bill Bryson's book, it's clear he never actually enjoyed two things: (1) the people around him on the trail and (2) walking in itself. Other than these two very important things -- they aren't problems, per se -- the book is quite good. I believe his writing lends itself better to spoken language than written words, so I'd recommend the audio CD.

Pace

I hiked twenty two point seven miles a day on average, but as they like to say, hike your own hike. Most people average between ten and twenty miles a day, going faster in Virginia, West Virginia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and New York. Most of us start off well below our average and take a month to get up to speed. If you aren't in good shape when you start hiking the trail, that's no problem, because you can start slowly and increase your speed as your fitness improves. One man I met started with eight mile days, but by his third week he was hiking eighteen miles a day. There's no particular reason to go fast, except that the faster you go the more often you hit towns, which means you don't have to carry as much weight in food. Also, it's recommended to hike quickly in Virginia because the state is just so big.

Gear and Other Requirements

I once spent an entire day contemplating the contents of a 1-quart ziplock bag. From six in the morning to six at night, scouring every inch of its contents in my mind, I was hoping to find a way to slash a few ounces. That day it was the first-aid kit, but other days and weeks it was other gear. In terms of gear, it's weight that matters the most. Less weight means less work, fewer injuries, and a faster pace. This provides the hiker with increased flexibility and improved health. What gear is truly necessary for a thru hike? The three heavy items are the tent or tarp, the sleeping bag, and the stove. Whatever you decide on gear, it's reasonable to spend five hundred to a thousand dollars in total on it.

Cooking

There are four options for cooking. First, don't. This works fine in places where you hit town every other day, but for longer stretches pasta and rice are too valuable. Second, you can carry a white gas stove. The fuel is essentially a pure diesel ... these are the kinds of hiking stoves that you pump before using. Third, you can use isobutane stoves, a variant of propane stoves. Fourth, you can use Pepsi can stoves. Pepsi can stoves are made from ... Pepsi cans. The design is based on a Swedish stove (the Trangia), and they burn rubbing alcohol, medical alcohol, or very strong vodka. Thru hikers can become gear freaks, and they have done the research on stove weight. The research shows that Pepsi can stoves are the most efficient in terms of BTUs per pound, followed closely by isobutane stoves. Also, you can make a Pepsi can stove yourself for supplies that cost a dollar.

Sleeping

I didn't carry a tent or tarp, though hikers in groups tend to find them useful. As for a sleeping bag, a lightweight fleece bag weighs about a pound and a half ... it won't help you much in the snow, but in warm summer weather it's fine. Some people like sleeping pads, but if your back doesn't mind the wood floor you can skip them. Lightweight fanatics are known to trim straps on their packs, cut the handles off of toothbrushes, not carry soap, never change clothes, and buy expensive titanium cook pots. When you're hiking for that long, the difference of a few ounces is noticeable, and the difference of a few pounds is important. If you don't use gear every day, you probably don't need it. If you can replace gear with lighter gear that does the same thing, you probably should. A hardcore lightweight backpacker would say that the only essential piece of gear is the bandanna. My pack weighed between ten and twenty five pounds, depending on food and cold weather gear. But even if you have a lightweight pack, sometimes you just want an extra item. I once found a copy of a trilogy of books by Asimov, The Foundation Series. I carried it for four days and finally finished it. The extra pound was worth it, for a short time anyway.

Emergencies

Hiking without a tent is an interesting thing. If it rains, you either find a shelter or get wet. On the 4th of July, I was hiking with a guy named Doc Gnarley in Shenandoah National Park. We were about ten miles from the next shelter and heard the thunderstorm coming, so we set up camp on the front porch of a private hut that was locked. Ordinarily you'd watch fireworks on July 4th, but instead we drank Coors Beer and ate potato chips while watching the lightning. On another occasion, I arrived at the Brink Road Shelter in New Jersey only to find it full, so I pulled the picnic table under the edge of the roof and slept on the table ... until my friend Sea Legs showed up two hours later, whereupon I slept at the foot of the shelter. I got kicked a lot, but it was dry.

Thru-hiker etiquette dictates that a shelter is never full, no matter how many people are in it. Since staying dry is very important to avoid getting hypothermia, you'd never want to turn someone away. So sometimes ten or twelve people will crowd into a space built for six. But generally, when people show up and put a shelter over capacity, some of the people who are already there go set up their tent (if they have one), so it tends to work out. One time it didn't work out for me, though. In central Maine, I arrived at a six-person shelter with six people in it at six in the evening. They informed me it was full, so I picked up my pack and hiked another nine miles in the rain with my headlamp battery dying, arriving at West Carry Pond Lean-to four hours later. When I woke up in the morning, it was so pleasant to be surrounded by friendly hikers who didn't mind sharing their shelter.

Finishing the Trail

The trail ends in Baxter State Park, at the top of Mount Katahdin. The hike up the mountain is the biggest climb on the trail, and it's a rather difficult one too, but soon enough you get there. There's a sign at the top, so people tend to celebrate when they arrive. I had a cigar and a can of beer. Some other people that day brought margaritas. I suppose it's an interesting feeling, finishing the A.T. You hike for months on end, going north to a mountain in Maine, and then you get there. People stand on the top for a while, get cold from the wind, and then hike back down the mountain. A few people decide they aren't done hiking, and start the long trek back to Georgia, but most thru hikers go back to civilization. When I finished the A.T., I took a bus to Monson, ate lobster, and flew to North Dakota. Two days later I drove twelve hundred miles to Pittsburgh, found an apartment, and started graduate school. In summary, in the week before and after hiking the Appalachian Trail, I drove as far as I walked in four months. But thru hiking stays with you. Trying to describe the beautiful views is difficult, so let me leave you with a quote about Mt. Katahdin, which to me is symbolic of the trail as a whole.

"Man is born to die. His works are short-lived. Buildings crumble, monuments decay, wealth vanishes, but Katahdin in all its glory forever shall remain the mountain of the people of Maine." -Governor Percival P. Baxter

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Deductive reasoning  
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Deductive Reasoning, Using Several Proofs of God's Existence

Date: Saturday, January 12, 2008

Time: 10:00-11:20 Communication Session by Mr. Douglas Perkins from US

What makes an argument a good argument? Philosophers have attempted to answer this question for thousands of years. We'll look at one standard for argumentation: deductive reasoning. After defining 'valid' and 'sound', we'll create some examples of valid, invalid, sound, and unsound arguments. Next, we will take a look at St. Anselm and St. Aquinas, Christian priests trying to prove the existence of God. For each of these mens' arguments, we'll determine what we think its problems are.

Rational discourse goes back thousands of years, but what is it that makes an argument good? We examine valid arguments and sound arguments, two terms that can help us determine whether arguments are good. This is done with two main examples: proofs of God's existence by St. Anselm (the Ontological Proof) and St. Thomas Aquinas (the Unmoved Mover Proof); in each we attempt to see if and where the arguments are problematic.

"An argument is a set of statements where one follows from the others: an argument is valid if whenever the premises are true the conclusion is also true: an argument is sound if it is valid and the premises are true..."

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I gave the talk at the Akita Communicative English Studies group meeting. See http://www.edinet.ne.jp/~takeshis/images/AES06/AESadd7.html for more information.

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This blog entry is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License. For attribution of this work, link to this page and include my name, Douglas P Perkins.